| DEERSTALKER | A hat with peaks at the front and back and earflaps often turned up and tied together on the top (11) |
| DEERSTALKERS | Hats with peaks at the front and back, with earflaps which are usually turned up and tied together on the top (12) |
| NOON | Twelve, front and back and upside down! (4) |
| SKIHAT | Cap with earflaps, often |
| VISOR | Moveable eyeshade attached to a helmet or a vehicle's windscreen; or, the peak at the front of a cap (5) |
| AMP | One often turned up in a club |
| CAPS | Hats with peaks (4) |
| SHEAVES | Bundles of grain stalks laid lengthways and tied together after reaping (7) |
| BESOM | A broom made of twigs tied together on a long handle. |
| WASHED | Cleaned up and tied the knot around the tree (6) |
| STRINGS | Cords or lines; or, sets of onions, pearls or other things, threaded or tied together on such thin strands (7) |
| TIPTOP | Really excellent peak at the summit (6) |
| CHEAT | Peak at the cards |
| STRAPPED | Hard up and tied down (8) |
| TRICORNE | A hat with the brim pressed together into three points, it was fashionable among men at the time of Louis XIV. During the Rococo period, it was also worn by women. |
| SLOUCH | From Old Norse for "lazy fellow", a word for an awkward or ungainly person; a hat with a flopping brim; a stoop; a drooping carriage or posture; or, one regarded as incompetent (6) |
| TRICORN | A hat with a brim turned up on three sides (7) |
| PERSECUTION | Picking on could be caused by being insecure at the top (11) |
| STEPLADDERS | Portable climbing aids that are made of two sloping parts hinged together at the top (11) |
| LEATHER | Calfskin, kid, morocco, napa or other tanned hide to which weathered skin or the coriaceous underside of a dog's earflap is likened; a strap for a stirrup iron; a ball for cricket or footie; or, a clo |